FILE - In this Sunday, Sept. 18, 2016, file photo, Nancy O'Dell arrives at the 68th Primetime Emmy Awards at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles. O'Dell of "Entertainment Tonight" is calling Donald Trump's 2005 taped lewd remarks about her sad and disappointing. In a statement released by the show Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, O'Dell said no one should be the subject of such crass comments and that everyone deserves respect, whether or not cameras are rolling. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

In the recording that was published Friday by The Washington Post and NBC News, Trump also said, “When you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything,” adding, “Grab them by the p—-. You can do anything.”

In her on-air remarks Monday, O’Dell said she’s been a journalist for more than two decades, and “it is my job to bring you news about others rather than turning the focus on myself.”

But the release of the tape that’s become a national story and part of the presidential race has “thrown me in the middle of the political arena of which I didn’t ask to be a part,” O’Dell said.

She used the opportunity to call for respect for all. Speaking as a mother, she said, children and especially young girls “need to know that their hard work, their achievements, their intelligence, their heart are most important.”

O’Dell, who did not refer to Trump by name in her remarks, thanked viewers for the many “kind words” she has received.

In her weekend statement, she said it was “disappointing to hear such objectification of women. The conversation needs to change because no female, no person, should be the subject of such crass comments, whether or not cameras are rolling.”

Trump was visiting a soap opera set when he and Bush were taped in a bawdy hot-mike conversation. Bush, now with NBC’s “Today,” has been suspended indefinitely from the job he started just two months ago.

“Today” Executive Producer Noah Oppenheim said in a memo Sunday that “there is simply no excuse for Billy’s language and behavior on that tape.”